Evening Star Newspaper, June 7, 1937, Page 36

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B—16 #x¥* AMUSEMENTS. Stage Refuses to Wilt Under Heat of Summer _Air-Conditioning Inventor Emerging as Sav- ior of the Legitimate—Bing to Bring His Broken English to Capitol. BY JAY CARMODY. T WOULD not surprise us, and we surprise easily, if the savior of the Not Shakespeare, who has had on [ stead of complaining of the heat, fount rate an “Oscar” (prize for an outstanding performance) from the stage, then the stage is dismally remiss in re-< warding its benefactors. Thoughts of this character are in- duced by the merry mail from New York today. There is a lot of it and it all is merry. are going right along in a theatrical way in Gotham. Producers are pay- | ing their wives’ bills cheerfully, actors are wearing clean linen, theater own- ers are cooing in the lap of luxury and even box office men are snarling more softly. Responsible for the miracle of it all is the inventor of air conditioning. The theater which used to wilt in the Summer is gath- ering dollars instead of dust. Science seems to have tossed a life belt to art and life is sweet again. It must be granted tha. the thea- ter has been a bit slow in recognizing the practicality of air conditioning. Years ago, the movies seized it as a ‘weapon to beat down the comnetition of the merry-go-round and roadside hamburger stand. The stage, with its head in the clouds (of glooin) seemed not to have heard anything about it. It has heard about it now, however, and all the animatd, happy chatter has to do with the fact that pretty soon the legitimate “‘season” will be a 12-month proposition just like the calendar. It will, of course, if Holly- wood has not stolen all the actors, playwrights, directors and other ele- ments of drama production without which air cooling riight be a pretty hollow thing. * ok *x ok RAY BELL lets us know that Her- man Bing is coming to Loew's Capitol on Friday. He lets us know a great many other things about Bing, among them that he has been “ter- rific” in New York. So “terrific”, in fact, that he is booked for 60 houses before he is allowed to go back to Hollywood and make his living with far less an expenditure of energy than is required in vaudeville. You know that Bing's specialty is murder- ing English, but maybe you didn't know that in real life he is an accom- plished linguist; that he could run &moothly with the diplomatic set here, speaking the set's languages like a native. ® ok k% LAUDETTE COLBERT is none of your stars who plays Claudette Colbert regardless of the name of the picture. The characters she hooks up with for Paramount are as different, from film to film, as seventeenth- century Puritan maids and twentieth century men snatchers. You can see her change from the former, which she played in “Maid of Salem,” to the latter at the Earle starting Friday. ‘The new film, “I Met Him in Paris,” is the farthest possible cry from the | saga of witch-burning in which Miss Colbert came to town several months ago. * x ¥ x CRITICS won't be home to callers this afternoon. They will be in the screening room of the Fox Film Exchange witnessing one of the fin- est ‘“double bills” which Loew's have staged in Loew’s history. First comes “Parnell,” and no sooner does it flutter | to an end than “Make Way for To- morrow” will take its place on the! screen. ® x x % “A RMY and Navy brides-to-be might go over to Keith's starting Wed- mnesday and learn just how to get along in case they have to go to Hawaii. “Wings Over Honolulu” is the picture and its story is that of a young bride who scrambled up a lot of lives before she discovered the Navy was no rival for her husband's affections, but just his loyalty. Mildred Cram, a Washington girl 4vho learned about navies right here | in the National Capital, wrote the | story. There will be a new edition of “The March of Time" on the same | bill. * ok % % | But now let Hudson Grunewald, The Star’s Sunday department boss, have the rest of the column. Writes he from | Hollywood: * kK ok | “STOOD behind the spotlights on the | M-G-M set this morning and | watched 'em shooting scenes for ‘Sara- toga’ with more stars around me than I saw out of the window of the sleeper plane on my night flight to Hollywood. “ ‘Saratoga’ is a story of the square- shooting, kind-hearted bet-a-buck-or- a-million dynamic fraternity that has made horse racing the sport of kings, and from what I saw of the picture in the making it ought to rank high among the hits that have made its co-stars, Clark Gable and Jean Harlow, one of the screen's most | popular teams. 1 “Supporting this pair are Lionel Clayton, Una Merkel, Frank Morgan, Reginald Owen, Walter Pidgeon, Cliff Edwards and 35 lesser lights. “The picture is due in Washington some time in’ August.” Jack Conway, who says he's going | bear hunting with Gable when he's through shooting “Saratoga,” is doing the directing. He has to his credit such directorial successes as “Libeled Lady,” “A Tale of Two Citles” and “Viva Villa.” * ok % X CLARK GABLE has one of those legitimate stage turned out to be the chap who invented air conditioning. derson, nor John Gielgud, nor Burgess Meridith, but the genius who in= It relates that things | e of his better years, nor Maxwell An- d a way to turn it off. If he does not | | Between shots he retires within its | seclusion for a quiet smoke and to read over his lines. We chatted about | the picture and he expressed keen | enthusiasm over his role as Duke Bradley, a young bookmaker and ! racing man. Una Merkel, who is a vivacious blond in the picture, says she hopes to pay Washington a visit soon. Frank Morgan is the same genial person off the screen as on. Cliff Edwards regaled us with a new fund of sturtes, told appropriately at the bar of the old United States Hotel, which figures prominently in “Saratoga.” Also met Virginia Bruce, lovely looking as ever, on the set of “Gen- eral Hospital” (tentative title) a new picture now in production, in which | she is co-starred with Franchot Tone. | And we watched William . Powell doing a difficult scene in “The Em- peror’s Candlesticks,” which George Fitzmaurice is directing. * ok ok % AD lunch today in the M-G-M | studio restaurant with BEN‘PN,; Kiesling, Alan Jones, who's starring and Mr. and Mrs, “Billy” Snxv.on‘ | of Baltimore, who are in Hollywood | to attend a family wedding. If you've never had lunch in a | studio restaurant, it's an experience | you won't soon forget. For here are all manner of people, actors and ac- tresses in various costumes, from | dairy maids to dowagers and bellboys to princes, directors and writers, cos- | tume designers and film magnates, all | taking time off from the whirl of activities that go to make a busy day in the film capital. {SEASON AT SYLVAN| ‘!with Jeanette McDonald in “Firefly,” TH EATER OPENS SOON | Looking around, we spotted Alan | Marshal, sitting near a lady with blue | hair who told us it was done that| way to get the right shading for a | technicolor picture; and Sam White | | (remember him as half of the Puck | |and White team in Showboat?) and | Robert Montgomery and Claude Dil- | | lingwater sporting long, dundreary ! | whiskers, and Billie Burke, whom | you'll soon see in “Parnell” with Ga- | ble and Myrna Loy, and George Mur- phy and Robert Young and a host| of others. * o ok X VISITED Jack Dawn, Hollywood's master make-up artist, in his| amazing ‘“beauty shop,” and he| showed us a weird collection of arti- | ficial ears, noses and full face masks. !He is the inventor of a new make-up process which makes it possible to so change an actor's face that his own mother wouldn't recognize him, and yet preserves complete muscular con- | trol so that unhampered “expression” | is possible. He told us that 25 weeks of work went into development of the “Good | Earth” make-ups before the final set | was accepted. He personally made | 90 head models in clay of the various characters. Then we went the rounds of the costuming department, where three- | score sewing machines buzz night and | day when big pictures are in the making and where the stock wardrobe | would take your breath away . . . and to the property warehouse . . . and to | the casting office . . . and pretty well | over the 82 acres which comprise the | M-G-M studios, where 2,200 people | representing 272 different professions | are busily at work every day of the | year. | That’s just a sample of what a visit | to a Hollywood studio means. But it gives you a concept of what it takes to make a movie that you| couldn’t have unless you came out here and saw for yourself. H. G. TERRACE DANCING Dinner. $200, Sat, $2:25 Cover, 55¢. Sat & Hol, 3110 Mo Additlonal Cover fur Dinner Guests] E"/,+BO0KS iety you need stigate our wide ssortment. Prices are surprisingly low . MORRISON PAPER CO. Pa. Ave. Phone NA. 3945 Long hours outdoors under bright Summer sun increase eyestrain. Be sure of perfect vision! " Consult our eraduate optometrist tods: trick dressing rooms on wheels rolled up close to the sound stage.' Special for Tues., Wed. and Thurs. Only HALF SOLES MEN'S PANAMAS CLEANED LADIES’ FELT HATS RE- BLOCKED & CLEANED. Suits Pressed in Ten Minutes While You Wait LIBERTY VALET SERVICE 1412 H St. N.W. ) M. A. LEESE Optical Co. 614 9th St. N.W. SEWED ON Ladies’ Leather Heels 15¢ Complete Valet Service While You Walit = A LIKE NEW, r THE EVENING STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C., An Old Favorite and a Newcomer MONDAY, JUNE 7 Both Victor Moore, who has forsaken his comedy to play a character role, and Barbara Reed, who is new to film fans, Friday at Loew’s Palace Theater. , play important roles in “Make Way for Tomorrow,” which opens RAMATIC entertainment moves outdoors come Tuesday, June 22, when the first of 1937's Summer festi- val programs will be presented at the | Sylvan Theater on the Monument slope. The Community Center Department and the Office of National Capital Parks, which sponsor the alfresco | entertainment series every year, have | completed all arrangements with the | local groups to appear or the programs. | The season will include 12 outdoor programs, running through June, | July and August and closing with the final event September 7. The opening festival will be Gilbert and Sullivan’s “H. M. S. Pinafore,” to be presented by the Estelle Wentworth Opera Group in answer to & number of requests for its revival. The Gilbert and Sullivan entertainment will be preceded by a half-hour concert by the Civic Symphony Orchestra, con- ducted by S. Page Ford. The second event in June will take | place Tuesday evening, June 29, when the Marian Chace Dance Group will | present ‘“One Thousand and One Nights" Entertainment.” The United | States Army Band will play the pre- liminary concert on this program. The Navy Band will appear on the | July schedule, the Marine Band will | be featured in August, and the Civic Symphony will make several other | appearances during the Summer. | The dramatic portions of the pro- | grams will be presented by the city's leading organizations and will range from a revival of Midsummer Night's Dream” to “The Drunkard,” | with stopovers at the operetta and the dance, | ol NEWCOMER ARY FRANCES GIFFORD, 18- vear-old daughter of a Long Beach, Calif,, electrical engineer, has | been signed to a term contract by S. J. Briskin, vice president in charge of production at R-K-O Radio. She will make her screen debut in “New | Faces of 1937,” playing a supporting | role to the four co-stars, Joe Penner, | Milton Berle, Harriet Hilliard and | Parkyakarkus. Miss Gifford studied dramatics after graduating from Wilson High School and has been appearing recently in | Little Theater productions. TRADE-IN DURING T = Where and When Current Theater Attractions and Time of Showing. | | [ Capitol—"Night Must Fall,” at 10:30 am., 1:15, 4:05, 6:55 and 9:45 p.m. Stage shows at 12:30, 3:20, 6:10 and[ 9 pm. Earle—"Kid Galahad,” at 11:50 am, 2:25 5 7:30 and 10:05 pm. Stage shows at 11:05 am., 1:40, 4:15, | 6:50 and 9:25 p.m. Metropolitan—"Her Husband Lies. at 11:40 am. 1:40, 3:40, 5:40, 7:40 | and 9:40 p.m. Keith’s— There Goes My Girl,” at | 11:25 am,, 1:10, 2:55, 4:45, 6:30, 8:15 | and 10 p.m. | Columbia—"Cafe Metropole.” at ! 11:25 am, 1:30, 3:35, 5:35, 7:40 and 9:40 pm. Belasco—"Ecstasy,” at 12:05, 2:05, | 4:05, 6:05, 8:05 and 10:05 p.m. Little—"Cavalcade,” at 11 am, 1:05, 3:15, 5:30, 7:35 and 9:50 p.m. Trans-Lux—News and shorts. Show | runs 1 hour and 15 minutes, contin- | | uous 10 a.m. to midnight Ambassador—"Kid Galahad,” at 6, | 7:45 and 9:40 p.m | Tivoli—‘Wake Up and Live,” at 2,| 55, 5:50, 7:45 and 9:40 p.m. PLAY CONTEST Bureau of New Plays to Assist 3 Young Authors. | THE second play competition of the | Bureau of New Plays, open to any | undergraduate or graduate student | now attending, or who has attended at any time since September 1, 1931, | any American or Canadian univer- sity or college, opens October 1 and | closes December 15 The Bureau of New Plays is spon- | sored by seven major motion picture | companies, to discover and encourage young playwriting talent and to assist autho not only with financial aid but with critical advice The committee of judges for the competition will be chosen from a panel of the country's leading pro- ducers, directors, educators, actors | and_critics THEATRE PARKING 6 P.M.TO 1AM 35° CAPITAL GARAGE jzo ¥ Ave. & 14ty GOODMAN POPULAR Earle's Stage-Screen Bill on Extra Show Schedule. ESPITE the hot weather the com- bination of “Kid Galahad” on the screen and Benny Goodman's orches- tra on the stage gave the Earle The- ater its biggest week end business since “Anthony Adverse” had its Washington premiere. Packed houses and enthusiastic patrons have caused General Zone Manager John J. Payette to announce that the special schedule of shows presented Friday will be repeated to- day. The Earle opened its doors at 10:30 this morning, with the Good- man swing sessions coming at 11:05 am., 1:40, 4:15, 6:50 and 9:25 p.m. “Kid Galahad” will be unreeled at 11:50 a.m,, 2:25, 5, 7:30 and 10:05 p.m. | EVENING OF MuSIC NORMAN FRAUENHEIM has is- sued cards for an evening of | music at the Arts Club, 2017 I street northwest, on Wednesday eve- ning at 8:45. The pupils taking part are Charlotte Gusse, Elizabeth Kirk- patrick and James Bopst. COLD PLATE LUNCHEON Served With Coleslaw or Potato Salad Assorted Hors d'Oeuvres . .30c Crab Ravigotte 25c Chicken Salad 25¢ | terpretation of each step. , 1937 LITTLE’S NEW PROGRAM FEATURES TIMELY FILMS “Cavalcade” Brought Back on Bill With New Pictures of Coronation. ‘WO film entertainments, one pro- duced nearly four years ago and the other assembled in the last two weeks, combine to make the Little Theater's new program, which opened yesterday, both fascinating and timely. Noel. Coward’s ‘“Cavalcade,” ad- mitted to be the finest movie of 1933-4, still stands as gripping drama, tell- ing the story of a typical, well-to- do English family’s joys and sorrows over a period of 30 years. But its atmosphere, picturing practically every major event from 1900 to 1832, builds a background for recent events in England that might have been filmed with just such a purpose. Clive Brook and Diana Wynyard are the young lovers who marry, raise a family and attempt to steer their household through the repercussions of the Boer War, the death of Queen Victaria, the coming of the machine age, the World War and the ensuing “jazz age.” Frank Warburton is the elder son, who goes down on the Titanic with his sweetheart, Margaret Lindsay. Frank Lawton is the younger son, whose love for the little dancer, daughter of his parents’ former but- ler, 1s ended by his death on a French battlefield. Although practically a panorama of British history and tradition through three decades, Coward and Director Frank Lloyd, whose work won him the 1934 Academy Awardy have achieved their effects through simple, supreme- ly human detatls, leaving “Cavalcade,” first a story and second a historical pageant. “Empire’s Hour of Glory,” supple- | mentary subject, compresses the high lights of the coronation of George VI into a 22-minute summary, complete with & running explanation and in- Filmed in sepia and including close-ups of both King George and Queen Elizabeth, the film was especially assembled from ac- tual newsreel shots. ROADSIDE %W%’ Orignal "X on the Rochville Dike (g JUNE T WIZARD ofTHEWAVE, 0/ Ccame -1T'S A MELODRAMA ¢ £ maht -except Sunday - mw-wm J.n!qZé ALL SEATS RESERVED - 45¢ Just to sit back and relax you temptingly prepared in cool, pleas- ant surroundings is the refreshing touch that gives you the added lift you Now en 1de &t MRS, DORSEY'S in Drectn while enjoy good, clean food, need during hot weather. You'll find it is all here for you. Food Salad_.25¢ Baked Ham___25c . . . ond many other Cold Plates. phess CAFETERIA NATIONAL PRESS BLDG. F STREET AT 14TH AIR-COOLED COMFORT Sent toyou on 10 DAYS FREE TRIAL THE POWERFUL GRAND PRIZE MODEL 9 EUREKA with Special Brush for Lint, Hair and Threads DURING THIS SPECIAL SALE only $'|98_5 . A Startling Value! Thoronghly reconditioned at the Factory and fully guaranteed like new by the mansufacturer. Originally sold at $45.00 ALLOWANCE HIS SALE ONLY During this special sale only—a trade-in allow- ance will be given you for your old cleaner. "~ Trade itin now. Phone for Free Trial in your home. Special arrangements for out of town S customers. Phone at once. Request Positively no obligation. free trial in your home. Only a limited number have been allotted us for this sale. Hurry! FUREKA YACUUM CLEANER (0. 724 - 1Y STREET . N.W. NAtional 2700 FREE factory inspection given to all Eureka users. Avold unatithg d agents. Never have you seen such a powerful, full size cleaner, sold at such an unbelievable low price. Looks like brand new. All brand new parts such as handle, bag, cord, brush, bearings, fan, etc. And remember, t| famous model won the Grand Prize at the Sesqui- Centennial Exposition—Philadelphia. Complete set of brand new attachments as illustrated $6.00. $999 Please send a factory Name. Addyess. 00 Balance small monthly payments— small carrying charge PHONE, OR MAIL COUPON AT ONCE guaranteed Eureka Model 9 to me for free trial during this Special Sale—no obligation. AMUSEMENTS. “The Bat” Revival Made Batty by “Prop” BY IRA WOLFERT. EW YORK, June 7.—Taking the heat wave into account, Ben Lundy chose “The Bat,” a spine-chiller, calculated to put your heart on ice, as the first | offering of his dollar-top season. | In addition he opened it cold, that Blunder come clutching-hand-minded, but this last one, a most matter-of-fact hand, was the one that broke our backs. The actors tried very hastily to go on from there, but the audience just couldn’t go along with them Of course, the play has other claims to distinction. There is no doubt fs, without benefit of a tryout or |that back in 1920 it set the whols preview. That worked out be too|t0Wn 0 looking under its “bed at much of a good tfing. I am talking | night and, further than that, started now of that dreadful moment in the | furious cycle of imitators. For a third act, when at last the trunk room | me it was impossible to go into a of the old house has been unmasked | theater without being scared clean as the front for the secret room in | Ut Of blood pressure. : which the million dollars that is the | BUt in Mr. Lundy’s production its source of all the play's evil has been | distinction becomes a matter of concealed. The problem that remains | [€3Tsay. Some of the actors are i8 to tap the walls for the secret pas. | {fOm the original cast—May Vokes, b . ing | 85 the scream; Minette Barrette as ::ii‘z];‘;: i?_“d tBetlddent spEItE g s ol reated s detecting— A pretty problem, as you may re- { but most of the others look on murder member if you date back to 1920, and | and hair-curling crime as just some- the actors fluttered in industriously | [1D8 o e de) shorc 'Howner, to solve it. However, the property | wc director is the boy to spank. man had anticipated them. He had S o Rke e audiances left the secret passageway gapmz'br‘f:‘h et hflv smrfl‘d;d hrmlv in 3 removing the actors’, and the piece ;’B‘g: and staring them plumb in the ca]l}?ps”alflnz like a riderless horse s | with all the actors tossing violently i e nad been ahie Baws ¥ after it and never quite catching up, the murders and clutching hands and | (COPYTIEht. 1937, by the North American strangled screams. but this wide-open peraTaRe Allence o) door, plus the task of closing it, tap- ping the wall ponderously to find where it was, hunting for the secret spring and finally gasping with fear as the darn door reopened, was more shock than they could bear. While scrambling around tapping walls one of the boys did make a furtive at- tempt to kick the door shut. But again the property man anticipated him. He stuck a brawny, shirt-sleeved | hand out onto the stage and yanked | the secret door back into secrecy. | That shirt-sleeved hand, material- izing out of blackness, was the un- doing of the audience. We all, in the course of the evening, had be- { 5 DE LUXE SHOWS TODAY | DOORS OPEN 10:30 A.M. 0 1 Stage Show 1 Feature at The Year's Most Amazing Mit! Robt. MONTGOMERY Rosalind RUSSELL “Night Must Fall” bl INPERSON BENNY MEROFF and America’s most versatile ORCHESTRA HELD OVER....! RobetTAYLOR Bbar STANWYCK Lv;COLUMBIA ;% NOW . .. LORETTA YOUNG Tyrone POWER © Adoiphe MENJOU .u’;;: N ROBINSON BETTE DAVIS | IN WARNER BROS ELLd BENNY GOODMAN Orchestra Samat e | ~MOONLIGHT CRUISES Ricardo CORTEZ Gail PATRICK { In Paramount’s | “HER HUSBAND LIES" Dining Room 60c 3undays & Wolidays, 78e COLONIAL EACH Trips Every Sunday 11th WEEK IN WASHI: Originally Suppressed by U. s. Customs RAYMOND * SOTHERN “THERE GOES MY GIRL" with FRANK JENKS ° Ceming .. . THE PICTURE ALL WASHINGTON w » 1S WHISPERING ABOUT 'WINGS OVER HONOLULU' All Seats 25¢ till 4 P. M. Eve., Balcony 40¢ £ s ACADEMY ©! Feriis Spuge hoteotas . Lawrence Phillfos’ Theatre Beautiful I18th St. & Col AMRASSADOR :3® % Son EDWARD G. ROBINSON and BETTE DAVIS in “KID GALAHAD.” APOLLO .3 %3¢ JE, JEAN HARLOW. ROBERT TAYLOR in “PERSONAL PROPERTY." Cleveland 2600 BING CROSBY MARTHA RAYE in WAIKIKI WEDDING Shorts. AVENIIE GRAND & JEAN MUIR. PRESTON FOSTE! OUTCAST OF POKER FLAT CALVERT 1 Wisconsin Ave. Cleveland 2313 . Matinee. 2:00 P.M. WALTER WINCHFLL. BEN BERNIE in “WAKE UP AND LIVE." Also _ March of Time CENTRAL % CLAIRE TR WHALEN ROMANCE" a MIRTAM HOF: AN 1 LOVE.” _ Also_Sho COLONY 4975 Ga, Are BING CROSBY. MARTHA RAYE fn WATKIKI WEDDING.” _Shorts. Continuous From 4:30 P.M | “PARK AVENUE LOGGER,” | With_George O'Brien and Beatrice Roberts | ‘UNDER COVER OF NIGHT,’ With_Edmund_Lowe and_Florence Rice. ARLINGTON, VA, on Wilson ASHTON Boulevard PAUL MUNL and | "HUGH HERBERT A M N in R YOMAN “THAT MAN'S VE. HERE_AGAIN." 508 7th St S.W. BIN “THREE SMART GIRLS T 11th & N. C Ave. CAROLINA, o Sttufiie ""THE ISMAN."" IR LE Home of Mirrophonic Sound c c Penna. Ave. at 21st St. Mstinees Tues.. Thurs OLIVIA DE HAVILLAND in_“CALL IT A D ews. _Cartoon. DUMBARTUN 1343 Wisconsin Ave EDWARD ARNOLD and FRANCINE LARRIMORE in “JOHN MEADE'S WOMAN.” News and Comedy FAIRLAWN _~¥icosmy Air-Condition GEORGE MURPHY in “TOP OF THE TOWN." Ave. 04 208 A RAYE in *_Shorts. Penn. Avenue S.E. Lincoin 2179 ER WINCHE _“WAKE UP LIDO T M St NW HISTORY IS MADE AT NIGHT. with CHARLES BOYER and JEAN ARTHUR. _Cartoon. News. u-n-LE T 608 9th st Air-Conditioned DIANA WYNYARD in “CAVALCADE.” PRINCESS g mstN R Double Featu: WITHERS in “THE HOLY TER- " CAROLE LOMBARD in "HANDS 088 THE TABLE.” 230 one Linc. MARTH. VEDDING. 200 PM. "LL. BEN BERNIE AND LIVE." WARNER BROS. THEATERS & Sheridan N. Ran. 2400 2:00 P.M. ROBERT TAYLOR PERSONAL PROPERTY. TIVOL' 14th ¥t & Park Rd. N.W, Phone Col 1800 Matinee. 2:00 P.M, WALTER WINCHELL. BEN BERNTE n VAKE_UP AND LIVE. Also _Time.” SHERIDAN ¢ Matine JEAN HARLOW in 8244 Georgia Ave. Silver Sorine Md Continuous From 6:00 P.M “QUALITY STREET,” KATHARINE HEPBURN. FRANCHOT TONE Mar Tim, 9. e darch of No. STANTON Gth and C 8ts. N.E st _Sound _Eauloment Continuous From 5:30 3 RETTA YOUNG and_DON AMFCHE in “LOVE IS NEWS.” GENE AUTRY in “RIDE, RANGER, RIDE,” rch_of Time._ ! ith SMILEY BURNETTE. _ Ga. Ave. and Quebec ace STATFE.RE QDA 6030 Wis. Ave. Place N Col. 1818 STATE-BETHFGD Bethe:da, Md. Gl‘::\?f;(jrrgpz\g;nww‘%r‘}ms_ Ng)hl;)[;"f ANNABELLA and e Oy e S HENRY FONDA in HIPPODROME 5%, ,7**p ... Robert Young “Wings of the Morning.” “Danzerous Number.* COMEDY and NEWS. Alice Fave in “Sine. Baby Sine." TAKOMA “& =) CAMEO JEANETTE MacDONALD. NELSON Deanna Durbin. ““Three Smart Girls.** “« YTIMEH AY“fliMn-Y»lin( T\{nr Rl FALLS CHURCH. VA. ARCADE mmsayise. w. RICHMON George Brent Go Getter. REED ALEXANDRIA, VA, Today-Tomor.-Wed. Loretta Young and Tyrone Power in “Cafe Metropole.” Free Parking Space—&00 Cars, Completely Air-Conditioned. ROCKVILLE, MD, Today Miriam Hopkins and Joel McCrea in Women Chases Man.” Also g Dempsey_in “Tdol af ‘Miliions. AIR-CONDITIONED. Free Parking. Conn_ Ave and Newark St. N.W. le: Rioo ati 2:00 P.M, W. ROBERT ' TAYI ‘PERSONAL PROPERTY. L ATy in MT. PAINIER. MD. Today S MIRIA] MecCl o "z'woum rth n de at Night." DORIS NOLAN in — ALEXANDRIA, VA Today-Tomor. ,and Anita Louise in in Al M. Vi N th & Irvini JESSETHEATER | " ™ “Wings of the Morning,” ANNABELLA and HENRY FOND. SYLVAN 15t and B L ave. N. Carrier Air-Conditioned “TOP OF THE TOWN,” GEORGE MURPHY, DORIS NOLAN. PALM THEATER VA. “Woman Chases Man, MIRIAM HOPKINS and JOEL MCcOREA. m Direction of SIDNEY LUST

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